| Literature DB >> 32706663 |
Tariq Osman Andersen1, Henriette Langstrup2, Stine Lomborg3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Most commercial activity trackers are developed as consumer devices and not as clinical devices. The aim is to monitor and motivate sport activities, healthy living, and similar wellness purposes, and the devices are not designed to support care management in a clinical context. There are great expectations for using wearable sensor devices in health care settings, and the separate realms of wellness tracking and disease self-monitoring are increasingly becoming blurred. However, patients' experiences with activity tracking technologies designed for use outside the clinical context have received little academic attention.Entities:
Keywords: chronic illness; consumer health information; patient experiences; self-care; wearable electronic devices
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32706663 PMCID: PMC7399963 DOI: 10.2196/15873
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Med Internet Res ISSN: 1438-8871 Impact factor: 5.428
Overview of participating patients with chronic heart disease and an implantable cardioverter-defibrillator (n=27).
| Patient number | Age (years) | Sex | Year of ICDa
| Symptoms experienced | Number of weeks using the Fitbit (not using) | Experienced Fitbit data relating to heart disease |
| P1 | 67 | Male | 1998 | No symptom experiences; experienced palpitations before | 18 (0) | No |
| P2 | 61 | Male | 2015 | Severe chest pain and shortness of breath | 47.5 (0.5) | Yes |
| P3 | 41 | Male | 2009 | No symptom experiences; experienced shortness of breath before | 41 (6) | No |
| P4 | 55 | Male | 2014 | Dizziness and sometimes fainting | 13 (5) | Yes |
| P5 | 66 | Male | 2010 | Dizziness and sometimes fainting | 8 (23) | Yes |
| P6 | 67 | Male | 2015 | No symptom experiences | 9.5 (1.5) | N/Ab |
| P7 | 28 | Male | 2008 | No symptom experiences | 6 (3) | N/A |
| P8 | 69 | Male | 2015 | No symptom experiences (primary prophylaxis) | 36.5 (11) | Yes |
| P9 | 47 | Male | 2008 | No symptoms experiences related to his heart disease; lung disease; difficulties exercising | 33,5 (14.5) | Yes |
| P10 | 61 | Male | 2010 | Sometimes feeling very tired | 30 (8) | Yes |
| P11 | 59 | Male | 2006 | Shortness of breath and sometimes sleep problems; finds it difficult to feel his heart rate | 8.5 (0.5) | Yes |
| P12 | 66 | Male | 2015 | Dizziness and sometimes fainting; anxious about getting a shock and experiences depression | 49 (0) | Yes |
| P13 | 67 | Male | 2017 | No symptom experiences; rarely experience fainting; leg tenderness and muscle fatigue | 44.5 (0.5) | Yes |
| P14 | 52 | Female | 2008 | No symptom experiences | 49 (0) | No |
| P15 | 61 | Female | 2004 | No symptom experiences; sometimes being anxious about the ICD/irregular heartbeats | 14 (1) | Yes |
| P16 | 47 | Male | 2014 | Dizziness and sometimes fainting | 35.5 (11.5) | No |
| P17 | 45 | Male | 2013 | Dizziness and shortness of breath during high activity levels | 35 (7) | Yes |
| P18 | 67 | Male | 2009 | No symptom experiences | 18 (29) | Yes |
| P19 | 66 | Male | 2005 | Palpitations daily; experiences periods of depression and has restless leg syndrome | 20.5 (1.5) | No |
| P20 | 69 | Male | 2014 | No symptom experiences, except sometimes shortness of breath | 39.5 (8.5) | Yes |
| P21 | 38 | Male | 2008 | No symptom experiences; worries daily about having a cardiac arrest again | 13.5 (0) | Yes |
| P22 | 59 | Male | 2001 | Shortness of breath and sometimes dizziness when exercising and running; rapid heartbeats and chest pain | 19.5 (0.5) | Yes |
| P23 | 49 | Male | 2017 | No symptom experiences | 47 (2) | Yes |
| P24 | 74 | Male | 2017 | No symptom experiences | 42.5 (6) | Yes |
| P25 | 51 | Male | 2014 | No symptom experiences | 9 (15) | No |
| P26 | 56 | Male | 2010 | No symptom experiences; sometimes feels palpitations and shortness of breath | 4 (0) | No |
| P27 | 58 | Male | 2014 | Shortness of breath; sometimes sleep problems; knee-pain due to osteoarthritis | 12 (5) | Yes |
aICD: implantable cardioverter-defibrillator.
bN/A: not available because the patient did not describe a relation between the activity data and his or her heart disease.
Dimensions of how patients experienced activity tracking related to their disease.
| Experiential dimension | Experience | ||
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| Positive: gaining insight | Learning that heart disease increases one’s average resting heart rate (P2, P4) | |
| Learning that medication influences the heart rate (P5, P22, P23, P27) | |||
| Learning that activity improves one’s average heart rate (P4, P21) | |||
| Using activity data to monitor heart pumping ability (P10) | |||
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| Negative: evoking doubts | No new learnings: Sensing is more useful than activity data (P1, P5, P16, P22) | |
| Doubting heart rate data (P2, P22) | |||
| When doubt becomes mistrust (P12) | |||
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| Positive: being reassured | Feeling safe through Fitbit reassurance (P11, P12, P17) | |
| Reassurance prompts activity (P24) | |||
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| Negative: becoming anxious | Both insights and doubts can introduce new anxieties (P12, P13, P15, P23) | |
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| Positive: promoting improvement | Being nudged and getting praise (P19, P20, P23, P24) | |
| Negative: exposing failure | Recognizing a nudge but not knowing what to do about it (P13) | ||
| Not getting the proper reward: the invisibility of “good” activities (P18) | |||
| Self-disappointment with poor numbers (P8, P17, P24) | |||
| Ignoring or resisting nudges (P18, P19) | |||